A Welsh Singer
A Welsh Singer is a lost British silent romantic film based on a novel of the same name. Produced by Florence Turner's Turner Film Company, it is a romance between two lovers from rural Wales who move to London and become artists. Among the company's most popular films, it was praised by British newspapers but received a mixed review in an American magazine. Turner starred as the female lead, while the male lead Henry Edwards also served as its director, marking his directorial debut.
Plot
The Welsh shepherd Ieuan and his lover, the shepherdess Milfawny, separately move from rural Wales to London. Milfawny gains fame as a singer, while Ieuan becomes a noted sculptor. Ieuan falls in love with Milfawny again while in London, unaware of her identity. Upon the two's return to Wales, they begin a romantic relationship.Production and marketing
A Welsh Singer is a lost silent feature film was made in the United Kingdom by the American actress Florence Turner's Turner Film Company. Like many films set in Wales during the 1910s, it was a romance produced by an English studio. It was based on the popular novel A Welsh Singer by Allen Raine, one of three films based off her work. The film was the first directed by English actor Henry Edwards, who also appeared as the male lead Leuan. The script was written by Edwards and American director Laurence Trimble. Turner served as the main female lead, Mifawny. Edwards and Turner had appeared together as co-stars in Trimble's own film earlier in 1915, Lost and Won. Other actors included Campbell Gullan, Malcolm Cherry, Una Venning, and Fred Rains. Edith Evans, who mainly acted in theatre, made her first of two silent film appearances; after these, she would not appear in a film again until acting in The Last Days on Dolwyn in 1948.The film was released in 1915. It was five reels long, with a total reel length of. An advertisement aimed at cinema owners in a trade magazine, The Bioscope, encouraged them to "Book this all-British film. It will not let you down. Never before has a film been produced with such artistic feeling and so cleverly acted." Various local newspapers in the United Kingdom ran advertisements for the film; those with closer links to Wales often put emphasis on the film's Welsh setting.